european union without paying. and since leaving the european union involves pain and no one s prepared to admit to that or compromise on that, you essentially now have this electoral contest between the undeliverable, which is a pain-free brexit, and unelectable, which is this marxist leader of the labor party. so it s probably not going to be an election that resolves the situation, much to everyone s frustration here. david, is the labor party going to be able to be resolutely the party that wants to stay in the european union? will it be able to present the public with that clear choice? i think that it s unlikely to be able to be wholly convincing in that. clearly, jeremy corbyn has his own history in respect to the european union. he voted against joining on fairly misbegotten grounds that it was a capitalist club. but also, he s acutely conscious that there are a number of labor voters who want to leave.
but also, he s acutely conscious that there are a number of labor voters who want to leave. and that he s torn, electorally there. i think at the end of this week, we know that boris johnson is not a strategic genius. we know that we re not going to leave on the 31st of october. and we also know that the next general election is completely unpredictable. because on the one hand, you ve got a conservative party that will be united, but divisive in the country. the kicking out of churchill s grandson. many of his friends have been kicked out of the conservative party. so it has become the brexit party. so the tactical voting. people who want to vote liberal in one place to defeat the tories, labor in one place, could defeat what will be the weight of the conservative message. all right. if you re all confused, just stay with us. we re going to sort it all out when we come back. aging? prevagen is the number one pharmacist-recommended memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin
party also the labor party now they have done very badly to they ve come 3rd they have lost many votes to the liberal democrats and that is because many labor voters didn t vote labor this time they voted lib dems because the lib dems want to remain in the e.u. and this all came down to brics it yet again the u.k. completely divided over this issue of brecht s it ok the u.k. might be divided but nigel frosh has been very clear about what he wants to see happen as a result of this vote let s take a listen to that we ve got a deadline of the 31st of october all right that is the day before which was mostly european union that s implied by sort of what we re saying is we ve got a mandate we demand to be over with a shooting scene to get this country ready to be whatever the circumstance ok but does that mean will we see now inevitable in october. nothing with bricks it is inevitable none has to be highlighted we know that the
do you think that realistically there is any chance that breaks it will actually not happen in the end i do i ve always thought that there s a good chance that breaks it wouldn t happen because when the british people who are now and if for anything for their common sense the reality of bracks it they would think differently from how they thought in twenty sixteen that is now happening all of the opinion polls show a clear lead for a main if there were another referendum and when people are given the choice between to reason may s deal and the deal we have at the moment the status quo inside the e.u. that wins easily there are a lot of people who just want to get wrecked it out of the way and also a lot of labor voters who really really want to leave the european union i mean how can you get them round to your opinion there is a minority of labor voters who want to leave the european union but when you ask them what their list of priorities are in their lives europe comes very low down
was walking in. he probably tried. james stravridis, i just thik that people in liberal democracies and from a liberal tradition need to understand so much of what s happened in america and so much what s happened in europe also is a reaction because european countries have refused speaking of gray zones to take a middle ground on immigration, where it s open up, open up the borders, have an eu where somebody can come in in one country and go across 27 other countries and the people a lot of people, a lot of labor voters in britain said enough. that s why they voted the way they voted in brexit. there has been no middle ground